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The New York Times said the book was a mixture between Stephen King's novel Misery and The Catcher in the Rye ' s main character Holden Caulfield. [1] On the other hand, the Lodi News-Sentinel hoped that abused youth would be persuaded to look for help after reading this book. [ 2 ]
You Don't Know Me is a British four-part crime drama television series. It is based on the 2017 crime novel of the same name by Imran Mahmood. The first episode premiered on BBC One on 5 December 2021, with the series available to stream on BBC iPlayer following broadcast. It had an international release on Netflix on 17 June 2022.
In Mahmood's first novel, You Don't Know Me, a young man on trial for murder urgently tells his story to a jury. [5] According to Mahmood, the novel was inspired by young men he defended in London courts. [1] The book's 2017 publication was well received.
Parade is a musical with a book by Alfred Uhry and music and lyrics by Jason Robert Brown.The musical is a dramatization of the 1913 trial and imprisonment, and 1915 lynching, of Jewish American Leo Frank in Georgia.
"Button, Button" is the second segment of the 20th episode of the first season of the revival of the television series The Twilight Zone. The segment is based on the 1970 short story of the same name by Richard Matheson; the same short story forms the basis of the 2009 film The Box.
Next to Normal is a 2008 American rock musical with book and lyrics by Brian Yorkey and music by Tom Kitt.The story centers on a mother who struggles with worsening bipolar disorder and the effects that managing her illness has on her family.
The author Megan Abbott was inspired to write You Will Know Me because she was curious how having a prodigy child would affect a family and its dynamics. While researching for the novel, she read Andrew Solomon's book Far From the Tree: Parents, Children and the Search for Identity, about families whose children are disabled, transgender or prodigies and the complex effect this can have on the ...
In his book Eddy Arnold: Pioneer of the Nashville Sound, author Michael Streissguth describes how Arnold and Walker composed the song: [2]. Cindy Walker, who had supplied Eddy with "Take Me in Your Arms and Hold Me" (a number-one country record in 1949 and Eddy's first Cindy Walker release), recalled discussing the idea for "You Don't Know Me" with Eddy as she was leaving one of Nashville's ...